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Christine Albert : Texafrance-Encore
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A waltz across Texas with Edith Piaf-a collection of romantic French songs and ballads delivered in Christine's emotive and charming voice.
Genre: Easy Listening: Love Songs
Release Date: 2003
Texafrance-Encore Record Label: MoonHouse Records
  • Buy CD - $14.99
SPECIAL: 10% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
La Mer / Beyond the Sea 0:00 Album Only
Coucou 0:00 Album Only
Mademoiselle de Paris 0:00 Album Only
Under a Stormy Sky 0:00 Album Only
La Foule 0:00 Album Only
Le Vieux Piano 0:00 Album Only
Undecided 0:00 Album Only
Plaisir d'Amour 0:00 Album Only
Sous le Ciel de Paris / Under Paris Skies 0:00 Album Only
Jolie Jolie 0:00 Album Only
J'attendrai 0:00 Album Only
C'est Peut-Etre Ca 0:00 Album Only
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Album Notes

When South by Southwest was held at the Hyatt, Christine Albert once landed a showcase in the hotel's atrium bar, an acoustically wretched space cavernously rising 17 floors to the top of the building. Yet hearing Albert singing "La Vie en Rose" from the 15th floor was as memorable as any conference moment this writer recalls. Her voice floated, the song's lyrical beauty free and dancing in the ether. The Edith Piaf tune was from Albert's 1992 TexaFrance album, a project loved enough that she's returned for an encore, literally. TexaFrance-Encore! reprises Albert's affection for her French-Swiss roots, this time with partner Chris Gage producing and playing with an eclectic collection of musicians so well suited they should play together all the time. A dozen tracks continue the TF legacy, Encore being an organically pleasing mix of cabaret-style tunes from the traditional ("Plaisir D'amour," "J'attendrai") to contemporary (Rickie Lee Jones' funky "Jolie Jolie," Daniel Lanois' "Under a Stormy Sky"). Albert's at her best with popular tunes like the familiar "Sous le Ciel de Paris/Under Paris Skies," as her pretty voice lilts between French and English. Her Piaf tributes are the most heartfelt: "La Vieux Piano," "C'est Peut-Etre Ca," and the saucy "La Foule," a duet with Albert and Gage doing what they do second best. It's no coincidence this album came out around Valentine's Day, because its beauty is not just in the music, but in its sheer romantic atmosphere, the kind you need no partner to enjoy.

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